The best way to address loneliness in our cities is to build walkable neighborhoods.
The best way to address loneliness in our cities is to build walkable neighborhoods.
New development can add housing AND character to a neighborhood. We just need zoning that allows it.
It's easier to have healthy habits in walkable neighborhoods, where you're biking to a friend's place for dinner, walking to the corner store, or stopping by the park on your way home without needing to plan out a drive.
Let's build more walkable places in the U.S.
"No one bikes in Arizona."
Tempe on a random weekday:
Last week, we hosted the Association for Commuter Transportation at Culdesac Tempe.
By integrating a transportation portfolio from day one, we can reduce parking demand and unlock the land-use flexibility needed to deliver beautiful, walkable neighborhoods.
That's awesome! When you're not behind the windshield of a car, it's much easier to get 10k+ steps a day.
Itβs not your fault that staying active feels so hard. In walkable cities like Paris or NYC, being active is just part of daily life.
We can bring that kind of walkability to every U.S. city. We just have to tap into the overwhelming demand.
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In 2018, we bet on Americansβ desire for walkable living and got laughed out of the room.
Now, Culdesac Tempe is helping shift what's possible. New ASU research backs it up: 18% of U.S. car owners would definitely consider ditching their car, and another 40% are open it.
Walkable neighborhoods are the only scalable model in the United States that delivers what residents and cities actually want.
Transportation freedom means being able to choose the right mode for every trip, whether thatβs transit, biking, walking, ride-hail, or driving yourself.
Not being forced to own a car.
Density without height works.
Weβre bringing attainable homeownership to SW Atlanta with 1-bed townhomes starting in the $190Ksβjust a short walk to MARTA and the BeltLine.
This is what people-first, walkable development looks like.
Every city deserves more beautiful third places. Our shaded courtyards and plazas create space for neighbors to gather, even in a desert climate like Phoenix.
This is how weβre helping U.S. cities become more walkable, beautiful, and connected.
Great energy at Culdesac Tempe last night as we welcomed a delegation of housing leaders from Arizona and Seattle-King County for a conversation on accelerating housing production and walkable development.
Excited for what comes next.
Americans deserve walkable living options outside of a college campus.
Walkability is making a comeback in the U.S. (and Phoenix)
The best way to address loneliness in our cities is to build walkable neighborhoods.
The U.S. needs more attainable retail spaces for small businesses.
Culdesac Tempe offers a spectrum of retail opportunitiesβfrom pop-up tables at night markets to attainable first brick-and-mortar storefronts, all the way to full commercial leases.
Cities can tackle their biggest challenges by improving walkability.
What if the U.S. built for people instead of cars?
Transit is better for the economy
Evolving transportation technologies are giving U.S. cities an opportunity to rethink our relationship with cars.
Transit & walkability shouldn't be radical in American cities.
Walkability makes it easier to connect with friends and neighbors, but it's illegal to build in the U.S.
Let's change that.
Walkability makes our cities more connected. It shouldn't be so hard to build.
Instead of structured parking, we should be building more plazas, courtyards, and local shops that Americans actually want.
It shouldn't be so rare to live in a walkable, connected neighborhood in the U.S.
Transportation freedom shouldnβt be radical
Local businesses thrive on lively, walkable streets.
It should be easier to build them in the U.S.
Car-dependency makes it harder to connect with neighbors and harder for small businesses to survive.
Culdesac Tempe is showing how we can help our cities and businesses thrive with walkable design.